mick
Well-Known Member
Does anyone know how good, or otherwise, these instruments are?
Does anyone know how good, or otherwise, these instruments are?
Does anyone know how good, or otherwise, these instruments are?
Maplin's cheapest is good enough for all my needs .... esp when they have them on a twofer offer
Probably a bit OTT. I'd go for a meter aimed at car mechanics.
To be fair the OP has not said what he wants this meter for.
There is something to be said in favour of a low impedance analogue meter for use on a boat. High impedance digital meters will give "normal" readings even through bad connections and easily make a fool of you if you are not careful ........ got the tee shirt!
To be fair the OP has not said what he wants this meter for.
However, if it is for purposes that require a meter of this quality he would not be asking here I guess and would have the knowledge to make the judgment and decision for himself.
You need a resistor something like 1000 ohms for 12v circuits which is wired in parallel with the meter leads. good luck olewill
I'm thinking of general boat use. I was wondering whether this type of meter might be significantly more accurate/reliable than the cheap ones. I've been guilty before of buying cheap and buying twice.
I expect it will be more accurate.... the spec should tell you the accuracy which you can compare with that of a cheap one. You can even pay extra for them to be calibrated if necessary
IMHO the 0.5% accuracy of my Maplin cheapie is more than adequate for the boat.
Maybe they are more reliable too but I have a couple of the Maplins ones and they have not let me down yet. A different consideration perhaps if I was an electronics engineer using my multimeter daily.
Past experience with multimeters is that sooner or later I will wreck them. I have done that to a digital AVO but if I do that to a meter I've bought on a "2 for £5 offer" it's no great loss, I still have the other one and I can buy 10 (or 20) replacements for the price of the Kewtechs you mention.
One of the meters you mention measures true RMS. Why are you considering that ? If you need to measure true RMS then perhaps you need such a meter but keep it in your workshop and buy a cheapie for the boat.
Thanks, Vic, and the same to everyone else. Looks like a cheapie will do.
Just my two pence worth.
the cheap multi meters are rubbish. They are VERY prone to giving widely innacurate results when the battery starts getting low.
If I want to take a reading that I know will be tru, I use my Fluke 93. The cheap one as fas as I am concerned is only fit for very basic checks where accuracy does not matter.
Can I ask a question (or 2) about the 1000 ohm resistor in parallel?
Do you use the resistor when measuring both volts and ohms?
Presumably, when (if) measuring ohms it is running down the internal battery so need to switch off pretty quick?